Climbers for shade
On 23 Sep, 18:49, Sacha wrote:
On 2010-09-23 18:03:05 +0100, harry said:
On 23 Sep, 12:48, Chris J Dixon wrote:
The south west corner of my garden has 6 ft high fences which are
not mine (and one is a bit ramshackle), and there is also summer
shade from deciduous trees.
In this corner at present I have an elderly mock orange, which is
no longer flourishing, and a bamboo, of the non-invasive variety,
which is now a little too large for the location.
My plan for next spring is to remove these plants, together with
a self-seeded Hawthorn on the boundary, and install three 6 ft
trellis panels, on new posts a few inches inside my property, so
as to avoid any support issues. (1)
I would like a selection of climbers to cover the trellis, and
give interest all year.
What clematis would be happy in a shady spot? How about an
evergreen honeysuckle? What else should I consider? Might I give
myself problems if I mix plants with different pruning
requirements?
(1) Yes, I will take photos first, just to establish the history.
Chris
--
Chris J Dixon *Nottingham UK
Have dancing shoes, will ceilidh.
Ivy springs instantly to mind. Most climbing plants are happy in the
shade, they climb up into the sunshine & flower there. *They are
genetically progammed to do just this.
You can always tell shade loving plants, their leaves are a very dark
green, they need lots of chlorophyl to gather energy from low light
levels.
eg holly rhododenrums etc.
Ivy on a trellis?
--
Sachawww.hillhousenursery.com
South Devon- Hide quoted text -
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Why not?
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